Lansbury: Mistake To Reboot ‘Murder, She Wrote’

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Angela Lansbury says “it’s a mistake” for NBC to call a new series “Murder, She Wrote.”

The network recently announced plans to reboot the show with Oscar-winner Octavia Spencer as its star. Spencer acknowledged her new TV project on Twitter last month.

Lansbury, who will accept an honorary Academy Award later this week, said “Murder, She Wrote” was her “greatest doorway to the world.”

“I suddenly became a worldwide-known character as Jessica Fletcher and really built an enormous audience, which I have to this day,” the 88-year-old said in a weekend telephone interview from her New York home. “That was the thing that really made me a star in the minds of everybody.”

Lansbury had three Oscar nominations and four Tony Awards when she joined the CBS drama, which aired from 1984 to 1996, earning her 12 consecutive Emmy nominations and international acclaim.

She’s sensitive about the show’s reinvention.

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“I think it’s a mistake to call it ‘Murder, She Wrote,'” Lansbury said, “because ‘Murder, She Wrote’ will always be about a Cabot Cove and this wonderful little group of people who told those lovely stories and enjoyed a piece of that place, and also enjoyed Jessica Fletcher, who is a rare and very individual kind of person …

“So I’m sorry that they have to use the title ‘Murder, She Wrote,’ even though they have access to it and it’s their right.”

Lansbury said she admires Spencer’s work.

“I saw her in ‘The Help’ and thought she was absolutely wonderful, a lovely actress,” Lansbury said. “So I wish her well, but I wish it wasn’t in ‘Murder, She Wrote.'”

Representatives for Spencer didn’t respond to an email from the AP seeking comment.


Comments (2)

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spike spike says:

November 11, 2013 at 10:53 pm

Please, please respect the wishes of the elegant and enormously talented Miss Lansbury as she created Jessica Fletcher in Murder, She Wrote. Try to find some writers today who can do some creating of something as entertaining and off-the-wall…if, indeed, such writers exist today who know more than four-letter words and do not have a commode for a brain! Those are my wishes.

Kevin Benz says:

November 11, 2013 at 11:15 pm

I agree 100% MSW could have gone on for several years, but CBS axed it for lower demos. Every season is excellent, and not too many shows can say the same.